people should study tenses of verb because then we use correct grammar
No - basic verb tenses are present, past and future.
Participles are verb forms that can function as adjectives or parts of other verb tenses. For example, in the sentence "The broken window was repaired," "broken" is a past participle used in the past tense sentence. Participles can be used to form different verb tenses, such as the perfect or progressive forms.
The sentence "I will go to the store yesterday to buy groceries" has mixed verb tenses and is incorrect.
The three verb tenses are past, present, and future. Each tense denotes when an action occurs in relation to the time of speaking.
When used in grammar 'simple' means one verb. The simple tenses only have one verb egI like ice cream = present simpleI ate the ice cream = past simpleIn contrast other tenses have an auxiliary verb and a main verb or a be verb and a main verb or a modal verb and a main verb. eg have been, will see, is waiting, was eatenSome people call present perfect, present perfect simple, but I think this is not correct. Most grammar books I have talk about 2 simple tenses - present and past.
Nouns do not have tenses. Verbs are the words that have tenses.The word study is both a noun and a verb. The tenses for the verb are: study, studies, studying, studied.Nouns have a singular and a plural form: study, studies.
No - basic verb tenses are present, past and future.
do dictionaries show regular and irregular verb tenses
verb group
stopped
Yes, they are the basic tenses.
"Bad" doesn't have any tenses as it's not a verb.
No, it is not a conjunction. It is a verb or auxiliary verb (for future tenses).
You is not a verb and does not have tenses.
The three tenses are: Past Present Future
Current isn't a verb, so it doesn't have any tenses.
No. The word have is a verb, or a helper verb to form perfect tenses.